Shingo KonoShingo Kono is a postdoctoral scholar at EPFL in the group of Tobias Kippenberg at the Laboratory of Photonics and Quantum Measurements from 2021. He currently holds a Marie-Curie Individual Fellowship, working on the hybrid quantum system of electromechanical devices and superconducting quantum circuits, as well as the optical readout of superconducting qubits. He obtained his PhD at the University of Tokyo under the supervision of Yasunobu Nakamura in 2019. His PhD research was focused on quantum measurement of itinerant microwave photons using superconducting quantum circuits. Then, he joined the Superconducting Quantum Electronics group led by Yasunobu Nakamura at RIKEN, working on the application of waveguide quantum electrodynamics in superconducting circuits until 2020.
Auke IjspeertAuke Ijspeert is a full professor at the EPFL, and head of the Biorobotics Laboratory (BioRob). He has a B.Sc./M.Sc. in physics from the EPFL (1995), and a PhD in artificial intelligence from the University of Edinburgh (1999). He carried out postdocs at IDSIA and EPFL, and at the University of Southern California (USC). He then became a research assistant professor at USC, and an external collaborator at ATR (Advanced Telecommunications Research institute) in Japan. In 2002, he came back to the EPFL as an SNF assistant professor. He was promoted to associate professor in October 2009 and to full professor in April 2016. His primary affiliation is with the Institute of Bioengineering, and secondary affiliation with the Institute of Mechanical Engineering. His research interests are at the intersection between robotics, computational neuroscience, nonlinear dynamical systems, and machine learning. He is interested in using numerical simulations and robots to get a better understanding of sensorimotor coordination in animals, and in using inspiration from biology to design novel types of robots and adaptive controllers. (see for instance Ijspeert et al Science 2007, Ijspeert Science 2014, and Nyakatura et al Nature 2019). He is also investigating how to assist people with limited mobility using exoskeletons and assistive furniture. He is regularly invited to give talks on these topics (e.g. TED talk given at TED Global Geneva, Dec 8 2015). With his colleagues, he has received paper awards at ICRA2002, CLAWAR2005, IEEE Humanoids 2007, IEEE ROMAN 2014, CLAWAR 2015, SAB2018, and CLAWAR 2019. He is an IEEE Fellow, member of the Board of Reviewing Editors of Science magazine, and associate editor for the IEEE Transactions on Medical Robotics and Bionics and for the International Journal of Humanoid Robotics. He has acted as an associate editor for the IEEE Transactions on Robotics (2009-2013) and for Soft Robotics (2018-2021). He was a guest editor for the Proceedings of IEEE, IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, Autonomous Robots, IEEE Robotics and Automation Magazine, and Biological Cybernetics. He has been the organizer of 7 international conferences (BioADIT2004, SAB2004, AMAM2005, BioADIT2006, LATSIS2006, SSRR2016, AMAM2019), and a program committee member of over 50 conferences.
Frédéric CourbinAprès ses études de physique fondamentale à l'Université de Paris-XI (Orsay, France), Frédéric Courbin effectue sa thèse de doctorat entre l'Institut d'Astrophysique de l'Université de Liège (Belgique), l'Observatoire de Paris (France) et l'Observatoire Européen Austral (ESO, Allemagne). En 1999, il quitte l'Europe pour trois ans, afin de poursuivre ses recherches sous le ciel pur du Chili, où l'ESO vient de terminer la construction de son VLT (Very Large Telescope), dans le désert de l'Atacama. En 2004, après un séjour de 2 ans à l'Université de Liège comme chercheur "Marie Curie", Frédéric Courbin rejoint le Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de l'EPFL où il est actuellement professeur. Ses sujets de recherche principaux se situent en cosmologie et en astrophysique extragalactique, ainsi qu'en traitement du signal. En 2018, il obtient un financement Européen (ERC Advanced grant) lié à son travail en cosmologie avec les lentilles gravitationnelles. A l'EPFL il est membre de la commission de l'école doctorale en physique (EDPY) et à été le tuteur de plus de 30 étudiants en thèse à ce jour. Depuis 2018, il est membre du Conseil de Faculté des Sciences de Bases et de l'assemblée d'école depuis 2020.